Violent Language and Its Use in Religious Conflicts in Elizabethan England. Discourses on Values and Norms in the Marprelate Controversy (1588/89)

Ströer, Sarah

Book (monograph) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Elizabethans saw eloquent language as the mark of the civilized gentleman. At the same time, they believed language to be able to harm, analogous to physical violence. Such concepts of language have important implications for the study of religious controversies of the time, in which the authors often attacked each other harshly via printed language. Employing historical discourse analysis, this study analyses Elizabethan concepts of violent language and shows under which circumstances Elizabethans understood language use as violence. In a second step, the main contributions in one of the most notorious theological controversies of the time, the Marprelate controversy, are analysed in terms of how these concepts of violent language were used as strategies of legitimation and de-legitimation.

Details about the publication

Publishing companyPeter Lang
Place of publicationBerlin u.a.
Title of seriesMünsteraner Monographien zur englischen Literatur
Volume of series40
StatusPublished
Release year2019
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish

Authors from the University of Münster

Ströer, Sarah
Cluster of Excellence "Religion and Politics"